Newspapers / The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, … / Nov. 10, 1898, edition 1 / Page 2
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H I - - rf.H . ,xT 1. - . . &nn . ... r ,v. THE WILMINGTONMESSENGEIt: THUttSDAT, NOTEMBE !- ' " ;! !' ..- ' .;: . .-. " - . fl . ,. b y .- .-. : ' I-.. - 1 ' Ufa -gjwssftr. r- 7ACKSON & BELL. COIIFANT. Und at the Postofflce at Wilmington.-K. CL; a econ3-aM toat-' 7 . r ter. April II. 17. ' TERMS QV SUBSCRIPTION. '.POST.-GE PREPAID. one year, $700; "six months, 13.50; three months ALlSfqne. month. 60 cents. ' Served in the city at 60 cents a Antk!i'nna' 15 r.mtn ' ' tl .75 for. UAUUUli , . . . . v . - v three months -or J7.00-a year. , I THE SEMI-WEELYi MESSENGER (two 8 page papers), by mail, one year, fLOO; sir roOnthsrtO cents. In advance. WILMINGTON. N. C. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 189S. li;t Tin: ii;orLi: hkjoice. Tbis ia.a time for rejoicing. It is a tvonderf uT and mercif 0.1 deliverance ihat has been wrought- under the bless ings of Jehovah through, tne might and Pinion ofi white hearty and hands. Let iiosantfas- arise, f rom " - all., pious hearts an( great happiness fill the hearts of, the true people every vwhere. " 'Never again so long as the world tolls and! the sun shines upon the chil dren' of men shall the. noble White Race 'be brought . under the : ruth- base," treacherous white Readers, the lowest of the low. "If in the armory of heaven there be a bolt "redder with nri uncommon wrath" it. must-fall upon - "if : , . . -. - . . . ' i r:,' . . those men who for filthy lucre, for damning lust, 6f- office, for a paltry "triumph-, ''for the perishing loaves and fisheChave sold their souls tothe Evil One, and- sought by, every appliance, . everyMngenious enginery.some of Vhich may have been forged in. hell, to. en slave their race, - their.' neighbors, friends and families and degrade them 'and huinilitate them and afflict even "with pains and penalties so as to make I. ' t It . ! -. i peace impossible and "life almost: not and should receive the unbridled scorn and reprobation of all true White Men. ! They merit no sort" of recognition, and should bQ made to - understand that those who seek alliances' with negroes ifor the undoing of society, the uproot I ing of institutionsi ; h.oary with age, the -destruction of (law and order, the prostration of busmess, the hnmilia .ion and 'enslavement of the White People, can not and shall not have the .confidence and . recognition of their superiors, o ttifi close of the ehapter. , I "Nothing' tn the ages is absolutely more disgraceful, Qre ( inexcusable, more unrighteous in ijll political his tory, mom recklessly low .and mean than the attempt of the. trading trucu lent, . 'conscience, - infamous :. dema--irbjruesi and " tricksters, deliberately. . -.-"-j ru :-.,- . J- .1 ;" ivith. malice aforethought,-of set pur- pOseTwith all due lying! and slandering 'and misrepresenting - attempting to place the White FeopIe,,men and wo- nleu and children, under the cruel, de- ! .1"!'".' : &"- '"t1 j' J- - testablei; -unbearable nomination ,01 SiiggersriJ Such' conduct-j is without any : ' I ' r .-'.'.. "-lli semblance r or jjustincauou -or iiia r tiofti Itwas a conception of old satan and lias been worked out, but to com plete '.disaster, jby agents of his own choosing, whom! he knows to be fitting .fnaJrnmontu for rtiaDOllsm ana a-uiii. , tions. j i , Let the peqpl )iee. ,vvitn songs an4 trunipets and harp's and: horns let the people rejoice. . - The Lord shall reign for ever and .ever. For the horse of Pharaoh went in, with his-chariots and with his horse men into the sea, and the Lord brought again theVaters of the sea upoi Miem: but the children- of Israel (whites) went oh dry land in the midst of the sea." , ' ' "I "Sing ye to the Lord, s for He hath triumphed gloriously; t the horse and hisl rider hath been "thrown into the A I illllin- UEV1EW OF TIIK CAiTA: VAIGN The hottest .campaign ever conduet- -ed'vih North Carolina -has just ended. it was most vigorously, most pertina ciouslyj 'most resolutely I fought. The , 'inspiration, was great. It was to de , liver North Carolina from, nigger con !t,trol, and. restore law; order, peace, de- cency, contentment and prosperity to lhe state. 'It was a' great battle for Ibonestyf for just and equal laws, for I good and econcjmical government "and lArisIo-Saxon civilization. The batUe was pressed under excellent leadership Never before wre more capablerspeak-. rs.-Qh fhe-side of the Whi!e Men in the field than in the campaign just con- eluded with such grand and glorious results,! j-f vic tor. t3 it too much a . Wilmington s newspaper to declare that If- white ittan but for! the1 example pf Wilmington the Went victory would npt have- come? 'bu' fo'the movement here inspired as of imitations. Use Elastic it was and pushed as ft was jwithTstich unrepreesed ivigor and defiant jdetermi nation the Black Hordearled iy plun derers -and scamps and enemies of their race, would have tbeen possibly in the Ieati with the skulls and, bones on thjeir flag and ruin their! incentive and battle cry, : Wilmington1 certainly set the pace this; year. Ohalrxnan Sim- mons feels -prominent this. Another 1 gentleman I bas1 Raleigh'j recently made, the same acknowledgment;- He says Wilmington's condition land' the flght waged for deliverance 'fumishe inspiration to the entire tate. ' Wil mington has veryspecial "reiison for, rejoicingjnbgreat I victory. ; The majiaeisfall- from the statue of - Lib erty, and Io Poeans rend the air. -- The Messenger has essayed to do its full duty. At much risk, at no little expenditure - of means,' with a great deal "of toil, with an intense 'earnest ness and ,re?tol jed will to help win the impending battle .: it-soughtil the very front, :and did all within its power to make glad the great .White Race, to bring victory and salvation and happl nes3 to'it. - Two years ago an editorial in the Messenger then favoredi making a battle for white supremacy. ! Gallant and able Buck! Ki-tchin says I the Mes senger taught him the wayto win.. In April last the Messenger again sounded the battle: cry-r-White Supremacy for North Carolina a White, -Man's gov ernment. Since then It has pressed this slogan of victory pertinacityi t j with zeal and Aagain oni the'21st of August it was The- Messenger that wasj first to take up the 'infamous and abominable editorial .In the negro paper- in Wil mington miscalled theJReeord, when in fact it waLthe Rattlesnake.and brought out in 1 full its cruel; -mendacious assault upon the. noble whitewomen of North, Carolina. The fscoundrel who wrote it in effect said, that he was a villain andj libertine and wrote of his own experience. The effects i of that dastardly, cruel, damning article was made glorious in its results, for it stirred the White Man 5s heart, and while he spared the villain who. thus abused and 1 slandered, he resolved 0 clean jip forever Negroj Rule inthis grand old .commonwealth and, to re store to the people" wisej humane, just and honest government j ft But it is notj necessary to multiply here. Our intelligent - readers know what the Messenger v has diligently sought to do for six months to bring to pass the delightful; 'animating, soul reviving consummation now ! witnessed and . hurrall)d i over. Congratulations to all true I. ' i . 'men who did Jwell and sought to lagriify and exalt and liber- ate" the no te st ale we live in and hold 1 . allegiance and r thanksgiving and igh and Holyi "One whq praise to th reigns in righteousness and commands alike the ' armies of heaven., and of earth, Gloria in excelsis! THE VICXOItV. The battle just won Yictoryvto the 1 White gives a great Race in North Carolina. "It -was ' a mighty 1 ground swell, a hugo,.,' majestic tidal-wave. The 'victory is well njgh -complete.. It is confined to- no county ori corner. The-" legislature, the supreme end sought, , and so imperatively ( needed, is democratic by" an :.. overwhelming ma jority. That means almost evefyxthing restored that was lost. It is the signal of wise,' needed, fair legislation, that will forever make. it impossible for traitors juid ' 'scoundrels to-reign in iniquity and oppression . The demo- cratic judges ahd solicitors are proba bly all elected. Seven ojr eight.; mem bers of the next United States congress will take their seats from North Carcn lina, and Governor , Rugsellj i ahd his myrmidons icanu not prevent I 'it, as has been threatened. The: next legislature .will attend to ithati.andj if lany thing1 be lacking, t the next United States house, that will probably !j be demo cratic, will finish .the jjob in marked perfection. "rThe democrats in. most of ttre counties' are. no doubt ielected to the county offices. New Hanover so long in thei hands of the villains will be saved and true, and honest men in. control. This is an occasion for local happiness and i congratulation:- Then the time1 is not distant when ireal Wnite Men will be in jcontrol of the city gov ernment of; Wilmington ijin all depart-rients,- every where. Loca!l self-gov ernment will be restored and the buz zards; the radical scaveijcgers,' and the birds of prey I will be clipped in their claws. scattered and THE UREAT MEETING -: . : On yesterday morning the!; greatest gathering of a free any enlightened people , we nave lately seem was held in the court house. .Thje' proceedings found , elsewhere were illuminative; They will Enlightening, .be i read by thousands ; who are in jterested.- The resolutions were conservative, calm, deliberate, persisted and full pfmean ing and purpose. Consider them well. There is no 'mistaking their directness andthe their "import, r moderation. Usi,T31astic Starch. Ti3t-lrjitii,rade 1 Vlark. There never assembled bef of e probably In all North : Carolina sq enthusiastic so heartily united., and so- hapy a body. The men who were there! were in most gracious, condition of mind, '-: ..., 1 .: . . ;! . ! .- i : f I . but they were as resolute-as nappy. made emphatic by acts, and that eijeryl ,1 a 1 I 1.1 ' .14 V. - ' t 1 ... I ceive the commendatiprand sympathy of all the real White Folks lai this gbod- ly' commoawealth. in which most of us were born and beneath whose noDit- , .,. , . . .1 1.' : IJ -1 . . able soil we hope to rest in peace;fter "life's fitful fever is ended." ?. . ri '- ; .-!:. ! ; .1 i .- i .l! . The unanimous calling of Conel A. M. Waddell to preside over bthis most remarkable of remarkable meet ings was precisely the; thing tfcg do. He richly meriu suchanhonoff , by reason of hisltalents and distinguished services to the party,' and his devotion ta his native North Carolina, it ' THANKS, i I ' . . The Messenger has v received, -many v e r yTwar hi .ncon-gxatu 1 at i on s and rand shakes. - It i3 pleasant to knowthat its friends are -pleased and satisfied with its efforts.! ' It was never before the recipient of, so many kind words. They come orally and by letter. Next to the consciousness of duty jperf owned, the most-satisfying is the cordials en dorsement of intelligent andj honoiible men, -and the sj-mpathies and applause of virtuous and noble -womep. i The Messenger" returns sincere thank j for ai good opinions, gained on iTusday by the: White Men at the. p'olls. tijt "is indeed reat thing for virtue toi tri ujmph over vice; for. honor! t'o snfctch the guerdon of victory from consent dishonor; 1 for energy to ; reap th? : re ward in the storm, and stress1 of !boh-' fiict, and for patriotism to secured sal- - . - ... 1 1 -.'w- vation and deliverance of the free'&orn of the. greatest race l known' jon earth "the. Aryan over combinations otj- vii lainy ...and - crime and desperation in and ignorance What a crime that was at temptedVagainst ' the white men! and " . . : ; . .-:c- ;;.t i f . wcmien of our state on i Tuesdayiflast, .Vice will receive : its own reward and false .ambition vand deliberate eHme will bring reproach and curses i-gpon the guilty ones. It issimply imj:!bssi- ble to "blazon , evil deeds or conse crate a crime" especially a' rime aimed' at all that ,is pure land good and I! noble in a state. . 1 'H i 1 r To Cure a Cold In One Day v Take Laxative Broio Quinin' ab lets. All .druggists refund the'Jnoney if it fails to cure. 25i - The genuine; has Li. JJ.'Q. on each tiblefc. i LITERARY , - .-.-,.' GOSSIP. Th ie publication of the gieat .Tbrms yle's letters to his mowier anl ils- Carlyl ter will enhance his character, hey re veal, that under the rudeVusUput ward man, borq. a' peasant, there burn ed a heart of loyalty and love dee and lasting. iNo son everoved'-a -irher more, and few. brotlQ ever! revealed a warmer sympathy and affectio for his sisters. He also was greatly at tached to his : plain, autere.i Upght, intellectual .father. He . wasra Kc-ry great genius,, and his letters arejdoub't- less among the most striking ant inter- esting in literature. An appr Native critic in the AtlantiaMonthly -cites. of his- love forhis ! very gifted- ftvife. ' .A . .... . --j . -5 with . the-' keen intellect and sharp: nguer ,: . "Yet for hfs wife he had ja'iong, often disquieted affection. Thelres sion of this in his letters to her.I'-hich are as remarkable for emotion fcgs-i or a very high order of writing, isloqsurse less checkered than it could ha S:een in the faring together of two suck ryoke fellows.'" . i '' jv. .1 Kipling's Vnew '. book.: "The i. Day Work" reached its third edition"fforp it was published, f and ' hasj in few days ascended to the i 25th itbkjisana copies. It is a very noteworthbook as all 'this . great writer gives - fr the world is. He is beyond fair; q stion. tne most giitea 01 Jiving wr -p im English ' 1 ifT. -- : - i i ' There is now a new and : esculent edition of Tennyson out in one V tiunt. price $2. It contains more advaHses tuan any other one volume ecltfou). He4 t ' v . i" .... i. i . I was--not oniy tne very greatest pw ui the Victorian Reign, -but he. ii. teaTl to one who can understand; and girlish him, one of the five oi six greatjjt of English poets. We hold with DftiVaii Dyke and. other , distinguished Jitics and poets, that ie'is third, Shakespeare, and Milt6n alone standing abovx'Rhim The excellent "monograph: of Mr. Gladstone is the small volume recently published by Sir E. W. HamlttS who was an intimate acquaintance 5f the "grand old" man." It escribes bifi pei1-. sonality, intellectual powers, acom plishments, aims, objects, JttcJ jin a pleasarit 'way. , . . Two valuable wrks of religious charaeter lbave just been issued. On is Rev. Dr. G. B, Stevens's work cix The-. Epistles of Paul,1V which are ren dered in modern English, and he gjires aaso tjac tuuuui ui mem. lie is a. pro - I fessot-in Yalo university. ' Tne other work is by Professor W. H. Grrieh, D.D LL.D. of Princeton Theological' Seml- nary, and who is one of the ;nost' learn- It ner fails, always ;ood-Elastic T ed and, k soundest of llrinr CiHIcXr- teachers h America. Illsjastbok Is an octarfo sand is a fGetieral .IntrcVitrc tion to tti! Old Teitament. Still asctker very valuable book by an erjU-rieat and gifted ' Presbyteriin is ife new edition , of , 'The Poetry of ,Tennysod. by. Rev. Dr. Henry 1 Van .pyke. Ij'fs tie tenth edition, but?"re Tised and inlarged.") We read it hea revised aa' enlarged a few years ?ago. It is bea&uful, fascinating, acute si2dy of- Tenqytm. It is simply delightful. He knew ;he great poet well, basins vfsked hita at his home. Jn the i last edition he" has a riew chapter on Hhat greatest of all elegiac poems, not ordi narily ' un'iers-tood, i 1 "In MemoriSim." It is oner rX .the very greatest nine teenth century poems. , 5 . StanleyjiSTeyman has a new nlstori ,1 cal novel &.ut called The Castle, J. W.. De il 'orTest has. one called "A Lover's lolt.7 . f- . ,: . ; ' . ;-- :. George!eredlthi'distinguishel Ipov elist,,soret'hing of a poet, and a'cfitic of inteilebtiial power, writes of aliform gotten; poe-, James Thompson, (. ' -'V .'-:,. -' ?. wrote sa try ghostly, weird poem en- titled 1Tb,etCity of the Dreadful Night" anrl cave. ;t riio. in imnrocclro n-or- ' ' 1 - i -' ; . f- ; ' . - . 1 f "rsothl is feigned, all is positive. No Inferiff "cbuld be darker. Bati the practical elTect of a greater part olj the poems j is that of a litany of the yaults below.i j t A brave, "good I man and tru&.'poet,' haplessTn his birth, fighting his best, as the book vould show, ;nGi failing though kbaffled.1'H ! I. ; PirirrCIIAISD'S COtNTV . ' . ' i "I5 ' '.-'- - :, .- ! I t . B;E y- ... v - - A i -; , ii; - - . 1 N .. Pritchailr the Tennessee adventurer, now weasft nR a senatorial . gow-nj propa North! cAtplina, and one of the ?very ! ' fii.s ' :':---' , e .-' -; -iijli . ' worpt jan most despicable enemif? .the WhiteiSlIrand Women of North ,Kiro- lina has,! fcs is seen by his disgliatrng course -ir'he canni',aigTi just eridfil- so disastousKy to. him and his garijf qX. maraukie the Wes lives in Mitchell county in part of our stare. I Jere- miah Jeneg- is "very happy..' He f has striven X toa continue - negro domination in all the eastern cfmnties , of gorth Carolina, If here j the negroes aue sin gTeat nu!m!bers and . in , office; But in his 'own own (Kiginty there is not a mggier'txi it, young r.old, jbtack or tan. Aeor respondent; at Ralei?h sends a fettw on the gr'ead eontestUn North Carolina for White! SUiiremacy. to The New Tork Herald Bead this, and then riitor": i "renkem- i ' . ber the :. VRepubfhfcans from the extreme west ern tcoHihtis hold aloof from thei black voter. Senator Pritchard; the republi can leaded in - North " Carolina.!! Usaw clearly -eleven years ago that thei ne, gro was ' sirangiing-the party,- antj he 'attempted to form a iwhite-repubcan party. . Tle plan- failed. vtepubSfcan leaders fo&nd : it? easier to utilize; the -negro1 in .tlie old M ay, ( though this ..was on the" Jfne of the declaration of! the Freri'eh jking,1 'After me the . dei Jge 1 ' Ixi flne count v all save wo 35 .county 5ffices and all Lthe legishtors are nejgjroes.. -In ? the extreme west: ne groes are scarce and " . In Senator Pritchard's county, Mitchell, there is not a ndgro.'-. That - county give a larger 'white-, republican majority I jhah any- in the state," yet; Senator Prtjtcb- ard's nephew- told ; me .iegro. isd not Andfnci- let the nigrers ball. xs.K-i and hurrah for the. mountain.s?hatorv ' to their, -heart's content..Perhaps jthey will what .soptxTf a fenaJce- thfj-j f;njld in their -bosom's which they have sprm- ed intMife. I j a Prince George to be Ilili Commission er to Crete r,on'tfti,itinorle. November 9. LTreat r.---, r - - . . .. . ,. t. , . Britaiih, 1 France and Italy havt'f ac cepted Prince si-oner. Crete. Russia's proposal t6 ai)oint George, of Greece, high cmTrus nff' ::he no jrers in the istatl of 15? : in The fTurlvish government has apifeaT ed to CTefnfiany and Austria agu.in.al the proposal, ttut Ineffectually. i NCURABLE! DISEASES i - Afcar.y, diseacts considered, in curable aecat$rrh utder otfyr names. Simple : eatarrljk i in the head' i& esiled m lnquraoieJiiton JM 'sumption ij& ca-' '1.V tarrn. of J the S?s- dou btipasielp in. the raof' ad- tzfv'- ivanced stes; people ! die all coasumilitiorvv needle: -.jy ' 1 1 , is . certaiii- that ;ter -phase of citarr, including manyass of consjiilntiar are cured ly tb, igfct treatirAt le-ru-ha Dr. Harti4an,s great hijfelcrijtion.vattaelcs catrfrhal disease s fccierttificaliv and cures tlrtseni. Dr. Unritmau explains, it fully ii? his books viuehlare tngjjedl an applicteion. Hero, i s f. letter from Mrs. llarmring, Haxo Mnlie, -.Wisj-; who is. one of;tany cured of i consumption by Porki-na .ssair'v-.- Dea '$bs:vI cannot . prais403JLr-remed,- highly.' Last winter' Jihad la jprippfe find' hemorrhage of the1 pngs followed! i All the doctors aroundjiere told nle Ut bad to die of consiimption. Then J ytnght I w'duld ask Dr. art man fprf Advice,; which: I did. Htf pre scribe Peru-na for me, and I t67k.it according v to bis directions nd was' cured. it advise everybody thfjt is troubled vrtth lung- disease to taklj Dr. Hartmian'l treatment. 1 I am siirhey will njt!regret it if they dot I amf now enjoyi tg- fe-ood bwitb,,i and can lank 1 Pe-ru-na ior it." 1 :f I Ak apy 4rugit for a free Pe ru.na bers cif I FT 1 - - -' : ... '' :: '. ' r - K rxir. s. k. niRRuXK qmpaxy. , . v yf j) J , ; I III ii 1 I I .ml ill ii ii I I i 1 1 I 1 11111 r, JjI , . l"'"'- 't. I - : -,; . " ' ' -V -Ai' v : lii-if v,; f .. .., v;--:vt,;. : '-.V ." 'jr.U- -7'- . ! l , v .,f.v,- is i;..:- - ,v. ,.. - -;..v . . ' I V v - -: m --r,,v- v-v-,: v-' ., r-- - St-' ' -..- .: . .-' .--, ; ,!- PETERSON GUEARINQ SAHlE atXAYLORB Afe we must make roolffor our Holiday,. Goods now. coming in, M ft will give you de cided bargains iriDry ds, 3h31inerv,and in every department. liWes', Misses' and Ghildren?s Gldaksj and (3;ipes, Under vvexir. Gorsets, Laces Eihbroidi'h-SHks4 Velvets Ribbdns and Trimming j Fifty doz. pair Kid Gloives just reeeivefiSn all the leading shades. . A 4-button GlMe at 98c pair. A 3-ciasp Glove worth $p for $1 a. pair. Come and sea for iyouelf what we are." doing in regard to oiirpHces, as we must have the room for Holiday jGbods. Pattern . Hats at one-half the former pVice& lis Market Street, 4 CLIfiARING SALE OPSMBROIiyERIE Tii' nrdr-to make room for the NEW this week' ofifer those on haixd atia ieductiriJ0f 20rper cent on every -doliara w.orth iand no fractional part thereof.! In )ljng' this offer we do not re-l serve i !.any-.po'rtttn of the present $tpck ' but,vAf,N jrmst. have " the spaeo , hen-cei :give otr customers the benefit, and we are fCt sure: this will get --liuti ot thrt way at this remarkable offer. L j' f-M,' ' 1 - ; CORSETS and U?9xERWAR. ! , , "vvTe carry the leading and best makes & .frse ts- such as "Iter Majesty,', Wsj-ner's C1B vAla Spirite, R & G, , Ame, -Siti Iady,-Koyal Worcester, in ytit ing I ladles'- Misses' and children's.! Ferri ifeod. Sense Waist, nothing bet ter foif young ladies and Misses. iVNAZAR-; .WAISTS "for -children andj' th i best thing ever known of its kind, i It ilistlc and. gives to every mo-i tic n of the body, this feature making the i I!2AIIET1I WAIST harder to! w jar lout than any other known, t : I. ! I . .. - . . . i LADIES' AND MENS' ..UNDERWEAR Jrfoth, wool and cotton. jAdiesl Ribbed Underwear in. single garments':and; tir-rqn Suits. Children's kod inJ cc tton, wool and sanitary. A small lptj LADIES! AN GAPES ANDiVIAlCKETS We bave looked wail to thijhdepartmentij iid have tobe - ix-Avbgk;: mont and have the most complete line to bj iurid. ; , - . j . ! CARPET DEPiiMTMENT Sorrthing new to he had all the time aA?.v4 a.re continually' asaking- ad anions. NEW MATTINGS THIS WEEK- f ' - 1 SUCCESSOS TO BKOW fe RODDICK, No. 29 NortHFitiit Street-!"' H. L, FENNELL. , HORSES AND MULES Must be s&ir this weefc. at living- 1 , prices. Also one gmi Plllch CoV J SATISF15TION GUABaNIEEDJ H. L. FEK'klELL iflw i lie lie iTo L-- : THE WILMINGTON SAVINGSI;D TRUST COMPANY. .::f.':.iM:'';:ji S AH deposit made on ()beforNovember 1st begin to draw Interest frot:fiate at rate ot per Children's RULFSi BAZAAR. .WUAiington,'.N:'C. STTjf.ki of EilBROIDKniES we will oi cf iit-irten s union suits. : 'ft it .1 HHMISSES t m mi i . Jjj! L. FENNEIiL Hi 1! 4 5r Aiy ask is inspotio oe orm jfi'Tlj -t . STOCK OF ; . . HtesS, BUGGIES, : - 1 6t4 TRUNKS AND BAGS. - ,m tit:-'-: tn - . .. t--, . . :.. fimESX AND MOST COMPETE 1 - AW. Vi'j - ! . .. : . . - ... ... -i .... . 1.1 ' ' K?'':' . 1 I - Se liflii -. -. ' 11 I.- ; Bew,are tare h. i 1 1- i i-r jl.,. Starch. r m , i - 1 i A : !
The Wilmington Messenger (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 10, 1898, edition 1
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